Inventor

Daniel Cooper

16Patents
10h-index
17Co-inventors
69Inventor score

Filing activity: Apr 14, 1975 → Apr 15, 2016

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5626622A Dual sensor rate responsive pacemaker Human Necessities 143 Expired
US4599219A Coagulation detection by plunger sensing technique Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 115 Expired
US4752449A Apparatus for coagulation detection by gas flow or plunger sensing techniques Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 92 Expired
US3972459A Tape dispenser having snap lock core members Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 62 Expired
US5817135A Rate-responsive pacemaker with noise-rejecting minute volume determination Human Necessities 49 Expired
US5487753A Rate-responsive pacemaker with anaerobic threshold adaptation and method Human Necessities 34 Expired
US5824020A Rate-responsive pacemaker with rapid minute volume determination Human Necessities 31 Expired
US5836988A Rate responsive pacemaker with exercise recovery using minute volume determination Human Necessities 30 Expired
US4663127A Gas flow cartridge having resilient flexible membrane with slit separating reaction and reagent chambers Physics 27 Expired
US4533519A Gas flow coagulation test cartridge having movable member establishing communication between reagent and reaction chambers Performing Operations; Transporting 23 Expired
US5713938A Fuzzy logic expert system for an implantable cardiac device Human Necessities 10 Expired
USD326462S Trigger lock for fuel pump nozzle General 8 Expired
US5792196A Rate-responsive pacemaker with automatic rate response factor selection Human Necessities 4 Expired
US10212231B2 Methods and systems for detecting a material source using a server and networked sensors Electricity 3 Active
US10579747B2 Injection of simulated sources in a system of networked sensors Physics 0 Active
US10132943B2 Spectral segmentation for optimized sensitivity and computation in advanced radiation detectors Physics 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.